It tags the web page with keywords so that user could understand the contents before downloading it for them.
You can register on a social bookmarking site to help you save these web address, store bookmarks and add tags.
After you registered, you can go public so that other user can see them.
When you share bookmarks with other users, those are distributed all over the web and also could be detected by the search engines.
Now the time comes when leads for your business flow continuously as soon as people search for services or products related to your business on the web.
However, it is most important task to make the bookmarking links easy to find.
Besides bookmarking your website, you could use blog posts and articles to encourage your online marketing.
When you post articles on the social bookmarking sites with build in back links, your chance to create a high volume of traffic to your website will be increased.
However it is on your hand to make your articles more eye catcher.
Because articles with boring content, may not attract customers to your web site.
Try to bookmark as much websites as you can.
Because, the more websites you bookmark better will be the result for you.
To be successful on bookmarking, you should develop the concept of bookmark sharing policy.
If other bookmarks your site then offer them to bookmark their pages.
By this fashion you can increase back link to your site.
Remember, if you are really serious about web marketing then social bookmarking are the best option now to increase your search engine optimization.
Typing in Google and searching for stuff has never been easier.
Have you ever wondered how it is changing us?
For instance, we want to look up the meaning of a word or find synonyms of that word.
We can find the answer in the matter of a few clicks.
In the old days, when the web was not there, we had to turn over the pages of a dictionary and find the word we were searching for matching the first few alphabets.
A search on Google, for this matter, certainly has made this easier.
We are too reluctant and lazy nowadays to consult a solid dictionary when Google is so handy.
We can also find information relevant to research in the niche we are interested in.
We can find new sites and bookmark them for future references.
All these information can be retrieved on Google clicks.
However, not all information on the web corresponding to a Google search can be 100% relevant and accurate.
We may in that case have to purchase books and consult them.
So for short runs it is okay and we can take it.
But if we are writing a thesis, research paper, article or report, this is where solid books come into the picture.
Not all the searches on Google give the answer we are looking for.
Sometimes we fall into a loop, continuously clicking and wasting our time when the information can be rightly found in catalogues or at the library of our office.
Free forums are available on the web and a Google search on these can rightly let us discover them.
I think it is good to consult the forums for the information you need badly.
This may be related to programming issues or other topics for that matter.
If they are popular, you get good solutions for your problems from gurus or experts in those forums.
Fiction eBooks come in handy as well on many free sites.
Instead of spending money on fictions, you can just download good fiction eBooks from the sites and these sites you can find on Googling.
The advantages of a Google search have made our lives much simpler, easier and cozier by letting us access the required information at a fast pace.
But for long term commitments which, I have explained before, Google searches simply waste our time without giving us the information we need and in that case, it is more reliable for us to consult a library.
You've probably all heard the phrase 'don't put your eggs in the same basket'.
When it comes to investing, you don't put all your money in the same basket.
In this article we'll look at the different investment 'baskets' and discuss our approach to diversification.
We don't want to make investment decisions that result in loss of our capital.
Diversification helps reduce the risk of that occurring.
Some investments have the potential to produce higher returns, but they also provide higher uncertainty over the short term.
Other investments produce lower, but more stable returns.
The idea of diversification is to give you smoother and more consistent investment returns over time.
Principle #1 - invest appropriately for your time frame.
When we meet with you, we spend a while getting to know your goals and objectives.
Any investment strategy we recommend has to be appropriate for you and give you every opportunity of meeting those needs and objectives.
If you have financial goals that are short term (under 3 years) we'd generally suggest cash investments - bank accounts and term deposits etc.
Whilst these investments won't produce high returns, your capital remains stable.
If your goals are longer term, you can introduce investments that have the potential to provide better returns over that time frame - shares and property.
You wouldn't invest in shares for a one-year time frame - it's too risky.
Conversely, having all your money in cash over a 10-year period is also risky - it'll barely keep pace with inflation after tax is paid.
So, depending on your time horizon, you could have some money invested in growth assets in order to gain the potential for better returns.
Principle #2 - Different eggs in different baskets
It's risky to have all your money in one investment - all in one property or in one share.
If it does well, you could make some good returns, but what if it goes bad?
Good diversification involves having money invested across the different asset classes - some in shares, some in property, some in fixed interest and cash.
The amount you place in each sector depends on your goals and objectives and the level of risk you're prepared to take in order to achieve your desired return.
Over time you'll see that each year different asset classes perform well at different times.
Principle #3 - Take from the good and give to the bad
We believe in the importance of re-balancing your portfolio.
Let's say we've recommended you have around 30% of your money invested in Australian shares.
Over the next year Australian shares produce some great returns and now make up around 35% of your portfolio.
We'd recommend you take some of the profits, and top up the under-performing sectors - if Australian shares now make up 5% more in your portfolio, other sectors will be below the recommended allocation in your portfolio.
This is a hard thing to do when things are going well.
Maybe if Australian shares do well the next year you'll regret selling down in the previous year.
But if that sector declines in value, you'll appreciate the advice we gave and the discipline in sticking to the recommended asset allocation.
Conversely, when Australian shares have a poor year and decline, we'll suggest taking money from the better-performing sectors to add to your Australian shares.
Principle #4 - Use different investment structures
When it comes to saving for retirement, for many people superannuation is the most appropriate investment vehicle for them.
But the further away from retirement you are, the more likely it is that the super rules will change.
Perhaps the change won't be major, but we believe it's risky to make major decisions on the assumptions that the same rules that apply today will still apply in 10 years when you retire.
We suggest you diversify across different investment structures.
For retirement savings, we favour superannuation as the main vehicle, but we'd also suggest other investments such as managed funds and bank accounts.
If the rules change, you haven't committed all your eggs to the one basket.
There's a danger in focusing your wealth accumulation on one investment.
I've seen clients with one investment property and a huge mortgage struggle when they couldn't find tenants for 6 months.
I've seen clients with large share holdings in one company (from an employee share scheme) see their wealth drop by 40% in the space of a few weeks due to the decline in the share price of that one company.
Imagine you've got money invested in 5 different shares.
If one of those companies goes broke you've lost 20% of your capital.
What if it was invested across 100 companies and one went broke?